Frederick Martin (editor)
Frederick Martin (1830–1883) was a British writer of Swiss-German background, known as the editor of The Statesman's Year Book.
Life
Born at Geneva on 19 November 1830, Martin was educated at Heidelberg. He settled in England at an early age. For some years after 1856 he was secretary and amanuensis to Thomas Carlyle, whom he helped in historical researches.[1]
In 1879 Lord Beaconsfield, who found The Statesman's Year-Book useful, awarded Martin a pension of £100 a year. He died on 27 January 1883 at his house in Lady Margaret Road, in north-west London, leaving a widow and family.[1]
An offside note: Frederick Martin was one of several authors for the 4 volume "The National History of England", an astounding piece of historical writing, wherein Martin expresses opinions in a grippingly realistic style, almost the like of the great Thomas Babington Macaulay in his "History of England" only a few decades earlier.
Works
Martin started a short-lived biographical magazine called The Statesman, in which he began an account of Carlyle's early life. Carlyle objected, so Martin closed it down. He inaugurated The Statesman's Year-Book in 1864. He continued to supervise it till December 1882, when he was compelled by ill-health to give it up, and it was taken over by John Scott Keltie.[1]
Martin's other works included:[1]
- The Life of John Clare, London, 1866.
- Stories of Banks and Bankers, London, 1866.
- Commercial Handbook of France, London, 1867.
- The Story of Alec Drummond of the 17th Lancers, 3 vols. London, 1869.
- Handbook of Contemporary Biography, London, 1870.
- The History of Lloyd's and of Marine Insurance in Great Britain, London, 1876.
- The Property and Revenues of the English Church Establishment,' London, 1877.
Martin contributed a memoir of Thomas Chatterton, prefixed to an edition of the latter's Poems (1865); superintended a new edition of John Ramsay MacCulloch's Geographical Dictionary (1866); contributed vol. ii. of The National History of England (from 1873), and revised the fifth edition of George Henry Townsend's Manual of Dates (1877). He wrote for various newspapers, and was an occasional contributor to the Athenæum.[1]
Notes
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1893). . Dictionary of National Biography. 36. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
- Attribution